Motorcycle Events
There are hundreds of motorcycle and riding-related
events in the U.S., Canada and around the world every year.
Some are as small as a few members of a small club taking
off on the weekend from LA to ride up to Santa Barbara.
A few are as large and well-known as the Sturgis or Daytona
rallies attended by hundreds of riders and their partners.
Daytona Bike Week, which has been taking place since 1937,
is one of the largest. Every March, 500,000 people come to
ride, drink and generally have a good time. At the center of
the event is the Daytona 200 motorcycle race but there are a
hundred other activities.
There's a dedicated 22-mile Loop for seeing the sights - the
streets of Daytona, the beaches and Florida scenery. But,
bikers being bikers, many riders are going to get off track
and make their own routes. That kind of rebel attitude is at
the core of what being a biker is all about.
The event has had a bad reputation from time to time - some
of it deserved. When you have half a million people in
Daytona in mid-March, there's bound to be some rowdiness.
Spring Break is nothing compared to this.
But far from being a huge crime club, the Daytona is an
event filled with families, couples and lots of single guys
looking to find cool bikes and hot women in one place.
Still, every year the clubs overflow with bikers who think
drinking beer and riding a bike mix well. Fortunately, they
have lots of designated buddies to discourage them, too.
See
www.daytonachamber.com/bwhome.html for additional
information.
There's also the venerated Sturgis Rally in and around
Sturgis, South Dakota. The event has been going on for
nearly 70 years and gets bigger every time. The original
founder, Pappy Hoel, started it all by buying an Indian
Motorcycle Franchise in 1936 in Sturgis, SD. Held in August,
the core of the event grew from the activities of the
Jackpine Gypsies Motorcycle Club formed shortly thereafter.
The original rally had only nine participants.
In 2000, the Sturgis Rally hosted over 600,000 people, as
both riders and audience, and covers a weeklong series of
rides, races, campfires and musical events, along with
dozens of other happenings. Though several others now use
the name, the 'Black Hills Motor Classic', re-branded as the
Sturgis Rally, is the real McCoy.
For more info, visit
www.sturgismotorcyclerally.com.
Then in October, there's the Biketoberfest, again in
Daytona. It combines a biker rally with the traditional
German beer drinking festival. Everyone flees from winter in
the north at the center on Main Street. Then it's off to the
route from US Highway 1 to New Smyrna for another week of
riding and fun.
For details on Biketoberfest, visit
www.biketoberfest.org. Or see,
www.daytonachamber.com/bwhome.html for additional
information.
All these huge rallies are big business for the vendors who
sponsor and attend them. Bikes, gear, clothing, food and
drink, and dozens of related (and sometimes entirely
unrelated) products are sold during the seven days of
organized mayhem.
But the major emphasis continues to remain squarely where it
is supposed to be: enjoying the world of motorcycling.